In a ground-breaking move‚ Justin Tkatchenko PNGʼs Foreign Minister shared details about their nations defense agreement with US: the deal includes $3.5B for building new run-ways wharfs and other military-related stuff
The agreement signed about a year ago comes as US tries to counter-balance Chinese influence in South Pacific region (especially after China made deals with Solomon Islands). Kurt Campbell US Deputy Secretary pointed out that Beijing might want to build its military base somewhere in Pacific waters; this creates a real-world chess game between super-powers
Pacific leaders dont want to pick sides in this growing competition. Former Pacific Islands Forum head Meg Taylor explains: the regions main worry is being pushed to choose between Beijing and Washington. PNG keeps trading with China despite new US connections which shows how complex these relationships are
Last month Lloyd Austin visited Fiji to talk about military stuff: US keeps opening new embassies and sending more ships to patrol the waters. The upcoming Trump presidency makes everyone think about whats next — his climate change views worry island nations that deal with rising seas everyday
- Infrastructure improvements for ports
- Military training programs
- New equipment for security
- Fuel storage building projects
The main concern is the Pacific doesnt want to be forced into a position where it has to choose
The regions leaders look at Marco Rubio Trumps pick for top diplomat who really doesnt like Chinaʼs Pacific plans: he fought against their underwater cable projects before. Some think heʼll keep paying attention to Pacific but maybe make things more tense with Beijing